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If you're going to be confrontational
with them and fight them and it's a war
and it's a battle, keep in mind that you
are going into that battle holding a
water gun and they're driving a tank.
>> And if we hyperfocus on it and throw all
the guilt and make it like they're
totally unsuccessful because of this one
metric, I think we risk throwing out the
baby with the bathwater. You are going
to have to fill your child up with such
and love and self-esteem and confidence
and perseverance that then your son or
daughter will be able to stand for that.
Welcome to the Learning Curve podcast
brought to you by Mishbaka Magazine.
We're raising children in a changing and
challenging world.
>> So let's tackle the important issues
facing families today.
>> I'm Rabbi Rhiel Garfield Manal of
Yeshiva Terrais in Houston and I love
talking about
>> I'm Rabbi Ari Shfeld Manal of Katana
Manhattan of Bipra Manhattan director of
camp. I also love talking and of course
a little bit of fishing. Join us as we
answer your questions and discuss the
topics that matter to parents the most.
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Habim and welcome to a very special
edition of the learning curve. It's the
finale of season three, a wonderful
season of the learning curve of speaking
in we get to do it live tonight in front
of an audience on Zoom and then
obviously it will be produced and posted
as usual. Shalom. Rabbi Garfield, how
are you?
>> Great to see you. Can't believe it's
here. That's the beginning of the end
after schwus, you know, the school year
sort of slides home. So that's this
whole
>> it's not a head first slide. I I it's
more like a trot, but a public service
announcement for those that are on and
and you know, maybe we'll announce this
a couple of times as people continue to
join. And that is one of the things we'd
like to hear tonight from some of the
people that are on the Zoom is and we'll
ask at the end are some ideas for next
year. Mr. Hashm will come back for
season four.
>> Wow. um at you know after the summer and
some ideas maybe what we can discuss
what we haven't discussed until now
maybe what we can continue to discuss
what has been spoken about it's been a
very special three seasons it continues
to be something that we feel is
obviously for us and for and hopefully
for the rabbim and okay away we go let's
get to it
>> should I ask you a question
>> so well I guess we'll start as follows
we'll start with a question. You can
read me a question. It's fine. And then
if you're in the audience and you like
to ask a question, you have one or two
ways. You can either chat it. You can
put go on find at the bottom of the chat
and chat and it will come to us. If
you're brave enough to want to be live,
you can raise your hand. Now, you know,
you don't have to raise your physical
hand. Obviously, we won't see you. Most
of you turn your video off. That's fine.
You can turn your video on either way.
It doesn't matter. But if you raise your
hand using that emoji to raise your
hand, then we'll we'll call on you and
you could ask your question live if that
fits. If you want, you can chat either
way. Let's begin.
>> All righty. So, here we go. I see and
hear from many girls, boys inim
married or just out of high school that
they feel like they have no relationship
with any teacher mas or rebi because
they felt they didn't have any major
issues or just didn't feel comfortable
to talk about it when they were in high
school. They were always good kids and
never really stood out. also the
opportunity to be noticed and spoken to
are much less now that they are in a
different stage in life. They find
themselves lost and unable to ask for
serious help advice when it comes to
shukim or in their marriages or even
what seminar is it really right for
them. This whole topic really concerns
me because this lack of guidance can
cause a really bad decision. I am
curious what your thoughts are and how
we could make meaningful relationships
between students and teachers without
needing to be troublemakers. The the
question is about is a question really
you know I guess in general and that is
the good kids that go unnoticed. So
throughout elementary school throughout
middle school throughout mifto if it's a
girl throughout high school it may be
what do they need? They don't need much
or so we think right and then it comes
to shukim. questions about then it comes
to or seminaries or big decisions and uh
oh all of a sudden they have nowhere to
turn to. The answer is that you know
both of us both sides of the fence have
to do a better job meaning that our
yeshivas have to do a maybe a better job
at not just focusing on those that need
it. I shared a story once earlier this
year. I'm going to share it again
because it's it's literally this and
that is a rash in Lakewood started
yeshiva and he went to beak yes of south
falls and he said I have a half hour
every night after marav right who do I
speak to in learning the 10% of the kids
that that need you know mental health or
the 90% that that want to talk about the
garis and if said you're making a big
the 90% that you think don't need mental
health also need mental health right so
I I think one of the mistakes we
as me as educators is that we think that
the only kids that need the help are the
kids that need the help. Really
obviously everyone needs help. So so
that's our job our it's a push to the
rebas to be more proactive in pushing
relations for even the the regulars so
to speak. On the other end, if you're a
parent of a child who's a goody goodie,
who's a regular kid, don't rest on your
laurels, right? Don't just say, you
know, push that relationship. Push that
relationship.
>> Don't wake up on and right before right
before some reason, uh oh, my daughter
doesn't have a mora.
>> How do you push that? What do you do
>> this? Well, reach out, you know, to to
the moras and try to foster. Again, if
it's a rebi, it's a lot easier because
you could create a karus shaft. You
could try to create that relationship. I
don't know girls high schools, which is
probably where this is, you know,
questions asked. When my daughter starts
nth grade next year, Sarah, I may be
able to give an answer. But I think
there are plenty of, you know,
in girls high schools that are available
if you reach out to them. If you reach
out to them. I think just sitting back
and just expecting
someone to be there for your daughter,
which is kind of the question, and for
your son, they have a lot of people. At
the end of the day, the ones that are
pushy get the relationship. So pushy is
in one of two ways. Either pushy is
because you need it because you get in
trouble or pushy is because you go after
it. You know, ask the guys in the mirror
who gets to speak to us and ask him his
questions. It's the guys who really push
and wait. So
>> would you say as a system? It sounds
like what you're saying is as a system
it really can't work. But if you're
listening to this, you happen to be the
lucky one who gets to listen to the
learning curve and here's the secret
potion, then be that one. But you're
right. For a system, it doesn't work.
That's what I hear you saying. Which is
fine. You could say that. I just want to
make sure that we're hearing you
correctly.
>> So this is the finale. So I get to like
we could like quote all our previous
episodes. It's like one of those
regardless I'm going to quote you. If
you remember, we had Mrs. Dvora Pinkis
on, right? and and and she was talking
about the gifted child and how we reach
him. And you said, "I wish we could
reach everybody,
>> but we have to focus on the kids that
need us more than others." So, yeah, the
system is a system. Every system by
definition doesn't reach everybody
equally. That's what a system is.
>> Okay. So, I mean, I I don't think I
disagree. You know, I think that it
doesn't really matter. I would say to
anyone listening, you know, the 40,000
or so, I don't know what our numbers are
as of now, but the 300,000 that listen,
you know, it doesn't really matter. It's
true the system has this weakness, but
you as a parent or as a child listening
try to reach out and like you said, most
people when you reach out, they
reciprocate. They're you know I remember
this is like a story like I when I
realized I wanted to go into being a
principal or into whenever I had a
chance I would try to meet mim meet you
know people in tomasura that were of
influence I was always trying to meet
people because I felt like you know it's
good it leads to it leads to things and
it does
>> right
>> so you know try to meet people
>> but that's you who have a certain type
of personality this is the kid who maybe
doesn't have that so it's not as easy
>> it's True. Sometimes parents I know a
trick that some people do like they'll
pay I don't know if kids are listening.
Your parents would never do this those
kids who are listening but they'll even
pay like a young cola wife to like need
a mother's helper to invite a middle
school girl to their home and help. I've
seen that done. So that's that's just an
idea that's out there. But um
>> Okay.
>> Interesting question.
>> Interesting. Well, you know, we'll do
one more question that we got in from
the pre and then if someone wants to
raise their if we have brave hand
raisers in the audience or chatters um
you could you could text a question on
the chat if you go on the bottom. If
not, we'll continue from there. Um
here's the next question. Thank you for
your excellent episodes. I really enjoy
your insight and exploration of current
issues. Way to get your question asked.
No. Yeah. You think there's an out
going?
>> I don't know. Getting nervous. Go ahead.
>> However, no, there's no however. Can you
please give perspective on the trending
issue of misa boys not attending
shakras? Okay, this is obviously an
assumption. Are we as parents out of
touch old-fashioned to exacting in our
standards? All the above or all of the
above when we wake our sons expecting
them to attend a minion? How are they
considered anus if they choose to turn
over in bed and sleep for hours namely
the better part of the day? I can't tell
you the pain we feel watching this
happen day in day out. We stopped waking
them up more than once and we will never
comment on those coming into the suda
after the first first course I guess on
Shabas. I understand that Shakra's
attendance is not an expectation in B
medish in most yeshivas. Please help. So
there's a lot of assumptions being made
here about Shakra's attendance in
yeshivas. Shakras attendance in general
Garfield we're both not in MFA but we
both taught in MFA
>> and we went to Msa.
>> We both went to Msa. Yeah.
>> The one thing I would say right away
it's not a trend. This has been around
for 40 years or at least I could testify
to 35 years ago when there were those
boys who just never came and they you
know I don't think it's a new thing but
I'll tell you my reaction you know the
empathy and the understanding that
getting up for shakers is hard for some
people you know some people have it easy
their body rhythms their focus their
enjoyment of davin whatever factors
there could be a whole range of factors
but you know the bottom line is that
there are children for whom it isn't it
is very hard and I would caution you and
it sounds like this parent is trying to
do this but you got to like really do it
is not to find their entire Judaism on
that one criteria because being a
successful Jew has a lot of components
going to shak
is a val is a value and but I think
because it's so hard we make it the
value like as if like it's one of the
top three things a kid has to do to be a
good Jew because otherwise we think they
won't go and I'm not sure that that's a
healthy way to motivate kids to go to
shakers. I wonder I haven't done a study
but if you looked at think about we
could do it right now think about the
boys when we were in yeshiva that had a
trouble going to shakers right are they
any less successful adults in terms of
their rnas I mean it's very hard to
judge that but I would suspect they are
not
>> that as they matured as their life
evolved they figured it out either they
go to a later chakras or they don't you
know I don't know but I've seen many
students who struggled with it mightily
in 11th grade But, you know, it worked
out. They worked out as Jews. And if we
hyperfocus on it and throw all the guilt
and make it like they're totally
unsuccessful because of this one metric,
I think we risk throwing out the baby
with the bathwater. I don't know if that
fully answers it. Would you say that
I've given it enough?
>> I I I actually have a lot to say on
this.
>> By all means, say
>> I want want you to finish your thoughts
before I
>> Well, I I think I I think that's my main
reaction. you know, you get into like
the the kids getting up at 400 p.m. I
mean, he's obviously going to sleep,
something's going on. I mean, that's
beyond. But a normal bucker who
struggles with getting up for Shakris, I
feel like we should, you know,
respectfully encourage it, but not over
not treat it like it is the definition
of a successful Jew.
>> So, I I I want to share two stories, a
cute story and then a story with me
about.
There are but I do think to give context
I'm going to generalize in an extreme
way. There are two very different types
of boys that don't go to shakus. There
is the boy that is struggling and is
struggling and he doesn't go go to
shakus not because he struggles with
chakras. He doesn't get out of bed and
he's not doing well in yeshiva and he
wakes up at 10 and he gets around and
he's sluggish. That boy is not a chakras
issue. that boy is a teenage struggle
issue and that boy right shakus maybe is
the symptom that you get to see at home
over the weekends when he's home that's
not a shakus issue and then there is
which I I'm just being media from father
mother it sounds like father um that but
I like to decide who the questions are
I'm I'm sensing from the father the
following and if I'm not then I'm making
up my own question and that is this is
like one of those kids
who's a good kid and he's stinging and
he's learning and he's not getting up.
What's going on here? It's that this is
a kid who's learning and not getting up
for shakers. And that you said is is not
a new trend. That is a a big challenge,
you know, conversation yeshiva about the
boys that will learn late at night. The
boys that will learn till one o'clock,
two o'clock in the morning and then
mishakas. The boys that will wake up
late in the morning, you know, not have
doning as a big of their a schedule and
then have a wonderful day in yeshiva.
You know, that is a much more that is
much more I think prevalent and bigger
topic of what you do. You know, I will
just share that when I was in the mir
we're both learning Arabic right there.
We're in the Sachs Iv and I was and I
went to complain to this is 24 years ago
as crazy as that sounds that was that
long ago. I went to complain to Raasher
that he's going too fast
>> and because in the mirror I was coming
from Salsburg.
>> No, I I didn't complain. I said, "What
can I do?"
>> 800 guys in the share. It's too fast.
Sorry. Show them up. Go ahead.
>> First of all, then it wasn't 800. It was
300.
>> Okay.
>> And I I was really complaining. It was I
was like holding on for dear life. I
said, "Then what should I do?" And he
looks at me and he says, "Where do you
dive in in the morning?" Imagine that
was his question. How do I follow Shir
if you're going so fast? And Abasha said
to me,
>> really? Wow. Okay.
>> So then he paused. I didn't answer. And
he said he right in right the 8:00. I
actually I ded in the yeshiva which I
don't think is around anymore called
Sharuna. Ever heard that Yeshiva?
Remember the Yeshiva Rab some Rab Z last
name Z Sharuna. Anyway, that's what I
thought. So I said, he said, "Do you d
in yeshiva?" And I said, "No." And
looked at me and he said
yes, which means I'll translate.
>> I right I never met anyone that was in
life who didn't. And he was imploring me
and begging me to d and he said to me
the doesn't compare to the avaraba and
yeshiva. That was his his soft his soft
little you know push. But so what I
would say is that I do think that
davening is you know you say ah people
that don't go to shakist that kind of
work it out later in later in life. I
think shakus is is and should be a big
part of that being said teenagers you
know and this is obviously a boy thing
not a girl thing um because is and for
boys but girls have to wake up early in
the morning also somehow they they
stroll out of bed and make it to yeshiva
teenagers who are learning learning late
at night they struggle to wake up and to
your point Rabbi it's not in their minds
it doesn't ple them. It doesn't
invalidate their learning. And so even
though you as a balabas you as a parent
who shak is the part of the day in which
you connect to for them it's it's 12
hours a day and therefore shakus is a
struggle and in their world it's not the
soul that you think it is and you just
have to recognize that. Or another thing
is boys come home, let's say they're in
yeshiva and they're pushing themselves
and they come home and they want to like
really veg it, which you know I think is
shocking for parents who are new to that
world, but it's much more common
>> you know. So, so I'll just share I don't
want to get too personal, right? But I
have three boys in MFA and B medish and
kern Davin on Chabas. It's an amazing
shul starts at 8:15 on Shabas morning,
right? Woof.
>> It is not often that my boys come to
Davin with me. Now, we could have a
separate which we have discussed in the
past. So, I should din with him, right?
Okay, fine. Separate conversation. It is
much more often that they dive in next
door to my house in a wonderful at 9:00,
right? similar conversation. This is
after a long week of learning. So,
>> right.
>> And we'll leave it at that.
>> All right. Let us move on.
>> I say people that are are texting in
questions. So, I'm going to ask you this
question, Rabbi.
>> This is a new one. Just came in.
>> It just came in. I'm going to read it to
you.
>> Um, and I say to the crowd, those that
are here, if you raise your hand by
pressing the the reaction button, right,
it goes like right or make what? Right.
Is there a hand raised?
>> Yeah. Yeah. It's on the bottom.
>> Some emoji. We'll find you and we'll
call on you. Here's the question to you.
My older middle-grade son is a bright,
fun-loving, sweet, and fairly innocent
kid. He has been getting closer to a
couple of boys in his class who feed
into his love of excitement and are fun
to hang out with. One of the boys has
some social challenges and we initially
thought it was nice for our son to be
his friend almost as a however and I
guess a lot of people listening can
associate with this struggle. As time
has gone on, we are not so thrilled with
some of the things he is picking up from
them. pop culture exposure to some
inappropriate behaviors, language,
right? Nothing in the terrible, unsafe,
but not our hashkafa. We don't want him
to be a covenant for the sake of being
friends with this troubled boy. How do
we go about dealing with this situation?
We've been told him, you know, sometimes
you say our our son is not available
that only works so much time, you know,
so often. This is I imagine anyone who
lives in a neighborhood that has a lot
of neighbors and a from neighborhood has
some neighbors that you're not so
thrilled with. Um that's just the
reality. You're not going to get up and
move. Not everyone can move to Houston
as as fast as Houston is growing. So
let's call this the neighbor, you know,
the neighbor challenge over Garfield.
>> Yeah. Very legitimate. A very legitimate
question.
>> We got you. The crowd got you.
>> Yeah. I have to think going to have to
think about that. I I I would say, you
know, I hope this is uh the best answer,
but this is what comes to mind is to
discuss it openly with your child.
>> What age? Now, remember, middle school?
>> It says upper middle school. So, I'm
going to assume older middle school. I'm
going to do the seventh grade, let's
say. Right? So, I would think that you
could have a conversation with your son
and say, "Listen, you know our family,
you know our standards. I wonder, you
know, when you hear other things or this
particular boy, like is that a bad
ashbah? What do you think?" Now if he
says he gets all indignant and says
that
>> very possible
>> right well then I would say your issue
is is broader meaning like you're not in
a situation where you could really
influence him in that way and then and
then it's a whole another level of
parenting finesse that's required
because you have a situation where the
the uh channels of communication are
very strained meaning I would hope that
a parent could work to develop a
relationship with their kid where they
could have a conversation again you're
not answering anything. There's no
policy being made. It's a conversation.
What do you think about? Right. Do you
think this is a good ashba? Do you I'd
be curious what you're leaving it up to
yourself.
>> No, I'm starting a conversation. I'm
bringing awareness now. I'd be curious
what the child would say because the
child might say, "Yeah, it's really not
the best thing, but I feel bad for him
and I I've already been." And then that
would be an opening to have a
conversation. It's not so push it,
right? Just to drop a neb just to drop
him. Maybe you could discuss how to
handle when he does things that are
inappropriate. Maybe you're open to that
conversation. I know children who I've
even in my school like I can have
conversations like that with middle
school boys. You know, if if it's calm
and it's just the two of you and there's
no extra emotional attacks and you're
not doing it as a got you or we're
changing policy or just a reflective
conversation. I I think I you know I'd
like to think it could that could be a
approach. I think that when you get into
assering the kid and especially in a
larger community, you can't watch your
kid and control where he goes. It's a
very hard um it's a very hard parenting
to use control on a social environment
with a kid that's in your child's social
sphere. So, the only way to really do it
is through
means talking, teaching, demonstrating,
problem solving, engaging.
I know it's foreign for a lot of people
like what? Talk to YOUR KID. WE WOULD
never do that.
>> My parents never talk to me,
>> right? There's no room for talking.
Yeah, there. I mean, that's what you're
gonna have to do. You could try
mandating. Go for it. Let me know how it
goes. Season uh five. Uh you'll write
back how you tried to mandate and your
kid ran away or something. But
anyway, what do you got?
>> So, you know, not so different than you,
but to me, I will say like this. I I
will share but a little different. But a
little
>> Yeah, I would hope you're a little
different. You're not
>> Come on. After all,
>> not talking to kids crazy.
>> First of all, this is a massive
challenge that anyone who lives in a
from neighborhood has I mean, unless you
live in, I don't know, new square, maybe
they don't have challenges in New Square
where everyone is accepted. There's
>> no one who's pushing that,
>> right? There's always
>> different envelope.
>> There's always, you know, there's always
the neighbors to the left of you that
you don't want your child to be, you
know, necessarily sleepovers with. And
there's always table neighbors to the
right of you that you want your daughter
to have a sleepover with. And then right
and there's always there's wherever you
wherever you are there's people that
that that are below you and then there's
people above you. I don't want to quote
today's garra but it's today's gamarra
in ina right
>> behind behind you're behind about f
getting a neighbor that's what the
gamarra discusses getting a neighbor
that's one step above you to learn from
your neighbor
>> but here's I think the challenge the
challenge is and of as we always say age
matters. If your son or your daughter is
in eighth grade, tth grade, it's a lot
easier than if he's or she is in sixth
grade, in fourth grade, in eighth grade,
in fifth grade. And I think what parents
have to realize is one of two things.
You're not You can move. You're not
moving, right? You're not You're not
moving. These are your neighbors. You
want to call the neighbors. Good luck.
You have to, and this is just it's about
everything in life because as you said,
you're not going to be able to control
so much of what your child does. You are
going to have to fill your child up with
such
and love and self-esteem and confidence
and perseverance that then when they go
to their neighbor's house, you know, and
their neighbor's house is feeding them
something that has a hexer, I'm giving
an extreme example because that probably
happens much less, you know, your son or
daughter will be able to stand for that.
You know, I heard an amazing story. I
actually saw it. Shiman Russell was
talking to Le Steinman
and he asked him I have a a parent who
came to me she they have a daughter who
they want to get to break up with their
with their boyfriend. How do they get
their daughter to break up with their
boyfriend? My lady was a hundred years
old. He's living in Benra. You would
think what does he know about a
girlfriend and a boyfriend? Right.
>> So turned to this father turned to Shim
Russell and he said is crazy.
>> Does the girl know that the father loves
her more than the boyfriend does? And
he's like, he's like, what? Yes. Does
the girl know that the father, does she
feel that the father loves her more than
the boyfriend does? Because if she
doesn't feel that, why should she break
up with the boyfriend? Right? Like a mic
drop.
>> Mic drop. So your as a parent is to
create such a a a self not just
self-esteem, but a feeling of pride with
your child that when these things come
up, no matter what age, they will be
able to overcome them.
>> Yeah. Okay,
>> we have a couple of questions coming in.
>> Let me read you the question.
>> Okay,
>> here we go.
>> I am concerned about the use of
classroom technology and some of our
from schools, Cahoot,
Gimkit, access to internet devices, even
if filtered etc. I recently read the
digital delusion by Jared Cooney
Harvath.
>> The research is clear and shocking.
Screens in the classroom actively harm
learning. The data I read was
overwhelming. Are mankim and our
community aware of this data? I'm
wondering how you see this data and
associated trends removing technology
from the classroom impacting from world
and if you see mankin discussing the
latest research on technology in the
classroom. I'd appreciate your
perspective.
>> I don't have I I I don't have the data
so I can't really speak to that. You
know, maybe this is the one of those
where being a little old school makes
you look good. Shiva time Manhattan is
pretty old school. Not on purpose. Maybe
this gives me pause. I'm trying to get
more smartboards and prethe boards.
>> Maybe you should read uh Jared Cooney
Harvat.
>> Maybe I read it. Maybe I knew it
intuitively which is why we don't have
you know when I was an eighth grade
rebby I did not use a Smartboard and my
excuse to the and I refused to mainly
because I was did not want to learn how
to use it. But my excuse was my sheet
that I created was in Mifa you're going
to use Smartboards, right? Right. So I
wanted wanted to get the boys used to
miss that which I think has merit. I
can't speak to the I I didn't read the
book. I do think that
there is so many different modalities of
teaching today that we have to reach.
There's audio, there's text and yes, if
you have a classroom and that you teach
your gamura and everything is on, you
know, the board on the whiteboard on the
smartboard, I think that creates a
certain distraction. However, you know,
Cahoots is this cute little game that
people usually use for like testing and
quizzes, right? And and it's a it's a
gaming a way to gify quizzes. What can I
tell you? It doesn't bother me at all if
a teacher is going to make a pie chart
and make a you know a ven diagram and
instead of coloring it in with with a
with a marker, they're going to use a
you know, they have it ready
pre-programmed
beforehand. I think the question the
question is had has everything it's all
about balance but I don't know what
they're doing in in Houston. We're
actually not a big smartboard school
Manhattan. Um we're an oldstyled school
just because of our building and it's
hard to get things in and and hook
things up. So really we're old school
but
>> I'm going to say I'm going to say
something something that uh is pretty
wild. So get ready. Prepare yourself all
the TLC listeners. Just a little
background. when I was uh a rebby in uh
Atlanta my first few years I decided I
wanted to go into being a principal and
I wanted to get a additional degree
because my masters was not in education
or leadership it was in counseling so
like I went back so at that time John
Hopkins University which is where I was
affiliated with from there is had a new
masters this is 2003 okay
>> okay
>> a brand new masters that was the only at
the time the first and only online
masters you could get and it was a
partnership with an organization called
ISTY IST which is the international
society of technology and education and
we had to go besides like them
co-sponsoring it so it's like high-tech
quote unquote but we had to go to their
conference the ISTY conference which I
went to I forgot where it was it was
like part of the requirement of the
degree of the masters so I did all that
and so I remember the reason I'm saying
this is here we are in 2026. So it was
at 23 years later. I remember the
excitement and the anticipation that the
education community had, not the firm
one, just in general. I was there. I was
at the conference about the hope of
technology transforming education. It
was like at that time people couldn't
get enough of it. It was going to save
the world. And then I remember when a
very wealthy person, I won't mention who
and what, but a a certain foundation
invested iPads in every school and they
were trying to get you could get for
free for your school iPads. And it was
like that was also maybe 20 years ago,
maybe a little more.
And we've been through Smartboards.
We've been through I think anyone who
has,
>> you know, is of my age so to speak, and
seen it,
>> we've seen the great promise that people
felt educa technology had. And here's
the statement I'm going to say. I don't
think as of now, 23 years later, the net
gain of technology has done anything to
move the education field forward. In
fact, if anything, it's put us back.
Now, that doesn't mean I'm against all
technology. I I think there's a place
for it, but I just mean collectively,
the amount of distraction, the amount of
resources, the amount of energy,
finances, all that stuff we've put into
technology has been such a waste of
focus. And in the end of the day, true
learning takes place by human
interaction with deep thinking with
Khazara, practicing skills. That's where
learning takes place, engagement and
technology has yet to be able to really
provide that in a meaningful way. So
when I look at the entirety of the 23
years and all the money and all the
ideas and all the latest trends and like
all of it, I still don't feel it has
moved the the ball forward collectively
in education.
>> Could I agree and add one caveat?
>> Surely.
>> Yes. Thank you. um the child that needs
to learn a little different, right? For
them, for that kid, having the graphics
and having maybe the storytelling and
seeing it on the Smartboard. In other
words, for that kid who really is a
visual learner,
>> there's a place for technology. I'm just
saying collectively individually there
are technologies that are useful
specific technologies here and there you
know or a reb who really knows how to
use a smart bird effectively which is
rare but there are a few who actually
know how to use it but I'm just saying
globally you know but
>> but technology but rabbi technology is
here so what so so if if it's
>> we have to be very slow this is what I
would say and we do this you know in my
school you have to be very slow like
never I would never allow the school. I
try not to let us get ahead of any
teacher where we're pushing it. Meaning,
if you have a teacher who has an
interest, ability, knowledge of a
certain uh technological thing, I'm
like, "Okay, you know, if you could use
it, that's okay." But we've lived
through schools where they said everyone
has to use a whiteboard and the
teacher's like, "What? Everyone has to
use a digital report uh you know, a
digital uh grading book." No. Don't put
the technology ahead of the educator's
ability, focus, and strength. That's
what I'm saying. I keep the techn
technology is not solving. It's a tool.
It's a tool. Listen, there are people
who have dyslexia who could who could
audio. There's I could read it to you. I
mean, they're definitely technological
tools that are out there,
>> but globally it is not saving the day.
It's just not
>> right. Okay. I have three questions that
were just posted by what's it called?
And I'm going to ask all three one at a
time. I guess I'll take Well, we'll do
one at a time. Um here's the first one.
Ready? Rabbi, this is for you.
>> Yes.
How should we react if we discover a
secret account or a hidden app on a
child's phone? Now, we're not going to
even say the names of
>> you know that there's some family like
that this is happening like watching
>> I before I asked the question so you'll
answer but I want to tell you a very
terrifying story.
>> Was it Dr. Blumenthal? Dr. Norman
Blumenthal maybe it was him. One of one
of the one of was speaking to a crowd of
Rabanam and Flappish. This goes back 15
years about you know hidden apps and
accounts and he read this terrifying per
like pro like inappropriate account that
was on Facebook which used to was the
thing back in the day. I don't know what
is today Tik Tok or Snapchat today. And
the crowd of Rabonaman Rebbitson were
like shaking and they said and here's
the catch. Ready? It's the daughter of
someone in this room.
>> That's great. I mean, it's not great,
but And everyone's looking around like
and like and you don't know,
>> right?
>> And so, so how did he be, how does he
know? Crazy. Because he walked into the
school and he went over to this daughter
to this girl, teenage girl, whatever his
school was in and he said, hey, could
you give me your phone number? And she's
like, I'm going to call the cops. Who
are you? I don't know. Right. How dare
you, creep. And he went home and he went
on Facebook and he and he sat there made
up a random name and said, will you you
try to befriend her? And she accepted
him. So now he has access to everything
she has. Um, fine. So the these are
obviously as as we we we say this in
joke. These are obviously very
concerning things. Anyone who's raising
teenagers, how should we react if we
discover a secret account, a hidden app
on a child's phone?
>> So I'm going to shock the world once
again.
>> Gee,
>> yeah, I mean I can't help myself. I'm
going to say talk to the child.
Is that like crazy? like say to the
child, well, first of all, I find it
interesting. You're going around the
child's back. Okay, let's I don't know.
That has to be dealt with.
>> I don't know that the your child's phone
was open and you see uh um you know, I
don't know.
>> Sounds a little fishy.
>> I don't know. Yeah.
>> I mean, the truth is that you you know,
the mistake was made when you gave the
child an unproperly filtered smartphone.
Happened to be that tag is exceptionally
good. They have a new technology that is
very, very good at this. So FYI, any
parent, you should deal with that
proactively. You've obviously not done
that and whatever. So we're dealing with
this. But that's part of the danger of
giving a child a phone is that uh these
kind of things are going to happen, you
know. So again, I you know, the child is
not a pariah yates criminal. The child
is normal and did a normal thing. So I
would have a conversation and I don't
have a problem with there being some
kind of consequences. meaning, you know,
because this happened, we have to we
thought that the phone was secure.
Clearly, it's not. So, we have to either
limit something you switch phones or get
it fixed up or, you know, that could be
like quote unquote a consequence. I
don't have a problem with that. But I
think again the is is in and we've
talked about this forever with Yakobson
and all this stuff. The is always in the
conversation, the lesson, the
engagement. It's never in the anger and
the rule and the consequence. That's not
the sometimes you have to do that a
little. But the is in your ability to
engage. So I would say in this case, you
know, you just got to engage. You got to
discuss it. Why is it a problem? What
does that app do? Why is the child
hiding it? What's going on?
>> So I want to add two things. Recently, I
was dealing with a situation where this
happened and the parents called me and
the and the the back and forth with the
teenage son and the kid said to me in
all vulnerable and all honesty, he's
like, "I don't understand. Parents want
to take away my phone, right? Because I
have this app, whatever it was, right?
And they're angry at me, right? So, I'm
going to take my phone. Do they not
realize that I have another burner phone
in my closet?"
>> He was like, "Straight on. And if they
take that away, I'm just going to get
another one.
>> Right?
>> And he was he was he wasn't even being
arrogant. He was almost like like
what are you doing? That's not how you
talk to me. And it reminded me of an
amazing framework like a framing of the
suga that I heard once from Greenwald. I
went to his his when I was married to
this is before I had children 25 years
ago. I know well that would be to be
weird. So it was probably 23 years ago
maybe when my first child was born. He
said such an amazing way to set this
conversation up and it stuck with me
ever since. And he said, "If you're
going to have a fight with your teenage
son or daughter, let's say it's son, and
your teenage son, you know, has this app
that you this phone that you don't like
and he does something horrible. What is
the worst thing you could do to your
child? What is the worst thing a parent
What is your nuclear bomb?" The worst
thing a parent could do to their child
is kick him out of the house. Right?
That's what you could do, right? Kick
him out of the house. Right? What is the
worst thing a child can do to you?
So he says, "So who's holding a water
gun and who's holding a nuclear bomb?"
It was an amazing, it was a mic drop. If
you turn your challenged teenage, which
this is, if you have a teen teenage son
or daughter who doesn't have a
relationship enough with you and isn't
confident, right, that they're hiding
apps, which is makes sense. They're
hiding apps, they're embarrassed. If
you're going to be confrontational with
them and fight them and it's a war and
it's a battle, keep in mind that you are
going into that battle holding a water
gun and they are holding a tank and
they're driving a tank.
>> It's an unfair battle. It cannot be a
battle. It has to be It can be with
pain. It could be with conversation as
you said. It could be with consequences.
But if you think you can just No more
phones, I'm taking away your phone. I'm
docking you. I'm grounding you. I'm not
saying you can't ground a child. I'm not
saying you can't dock a child, but it
has to be within the context of a
relationship because they will get on
the phone and they hold all the keys
>> to to the future of your
>> I know that people I don't know the
people listening but there are people
who find this kind of talk
>> too and new yeah it's like new age and
everything and I would just say to them
I hear you tell me the alternative like
I'm open I'm not maybe we're wrong you
know maybe were wrong. You have to beat
the kid up. I just we just don't see
that that works. It's not like a
shittita. It's just like practical. It
just doesn't it doesn't work. I don't
know what to say. Like I'm sorry that
we're so nice to kids. I wish you know
if it wasn't I wouldn't be. But Lameisa,
I don't know another way. I just don't
>> I I I want to share something a little
bit almost like funny and that is I was
at the Manal's conference recently that
you you ran so unbelievably well at
Thomas Manal conference and I think
someone asked one of them now limit you
know when you're 25 years of what have
been the biggest changes right the great
question and I was sitting there
thinking to myself oh my gosh I'm in for
20 years right what would I answer to
that question if I got I never know I
was always the little kid what if I was
if if I was which I'm asking myself now
right what would I answer and I think
this is the biggest difference and I
want to explain it with like a the
biggest difference between today and 15
years ago is that children and teenagers
partly because of the fact that they are
given certain whether it's whether they
have exposure in a good way to material
to reading material to to learning to
podcasts to articles in in newspapers
children today and teenagers today are
much less authoritarian
and much more shovea and equal partners
in conversations than they were 20 years
ago. You know, again, I'm not I'm not
bad or good. There's obviously
tremendous challenges with that. But 20
years ago, you were just able to say
this is the way it is. And there was a
much more on an overarching way of okay,
okay, aba, okay, daddy, that's the way
it is. I think our the the biggest
fundamental change and it's like this in
middle school. We explain things to
kids. Kids need to be validated and felt
and seen and heard. All of these
buzzwords. We could chicken and egg it
from today till tomorrow. But we're
there. And since we're there, to your
point, Garfield, if you're just going to
try to turn back the clock 20 years and
say you had an app on your phone, I'm
breaking your phone. If that works,
>> not in my house, you won't have an app,
>> right? Not in my house. You know what?
You know, your son can say to you, your
daughter can say to you, "Okay, bye."
And then what? Right? You have, it's
almost like, "And then what?" Right? You
want to be tough with your kid until
your kid walks out of the house. And
then what? Oops.
>> Do you have any other The time is flying
by. We're We barely uh started. We have
Rakkesh on a lot of questions coming in.
And do do you have uh another one that
just came to you?
>> Yes. No, I'm gonna So I I'm going to
take this one. How's that? Ready?
>> Go ahead. In the recently released book,
The Welleducated Child, this is from
someone listening here tonight. You know
that book, Rabbi? The well-educated
child. I don't.
>> I'm not sure.
>> The principal has a theory that she only
hires teachers who loves kids.
>> Well, that's the Harlem Center. I
actually am familiar with that. Shout
out to my dear brother Sam Garfield who
just sent to me in the mail this shabus.
So, I think it was featured in the Wall
Street Journal. Anyway, continue. I just
started.
>> Do you agree? Can you have a great
teacher who loves teaching but doesn't
love kids? Is it feasible that every
teacher will love kids? Wow. So, um I
will just share when people say to me,
hey, should I go into right and in camp
and and
often counselors are getting married,
you know, Rabbi, what do you think? I
want to go into what do you think? My my
I I've said shared this before. I'll
I'll share it again. My response to them
is like a little bit off the beaten
path. And I said, "If you were not
Jewish, would you want to go into?"
>> If the answer is no, then don't go into
if you're going to only because of
teaching to
then maybe be, you know, then maybe
become a M. I don't know then then give
Shirim and and writeim and give and give
and do that. But it has to be first and
foremost is do you love the children?
And I it sounds so, you know, cliche. So
I'm not, you know,
Um, we had Reveli Brney, right? Reveli
Brneydney in the Q&A at the conference
was asked, "If you have someone who's
the other person is just much better
with kids and he connects the kids and
he likes kids more, what should you who
should you hire?" And Britney said,
"Such a sharp line." I don't know if you
remember it. He said, "Hire the second
one." And he said, "A stellar isn't
supposed to be a reward for good
behavior."
>> Yeah.
>> Right. That was a Britney's line. You
know, of course, the fact that you're
Your mind might help you connect to kids
because they'll look up to you. Of
course, that should be. But is it
feasible that every teacher would love
kids? The good ones do. The great ones
do.
>> Yeah. No,
>> I would say it it is not it's not so
feasible. But that's not the point. The
point is the more you could feel and
give over and be genuine
the famous uh movement of from Hoffman
and Marstein who's written some books
right the more you could do that it's
not a zero sum game it's not like either
you love or you don't you know you try
to love as many kids as you can and give
it over as much as you can as as often
but the reality is on a given Tuesday
after you're tired and you were up and
you drove and the kid's doing an
annoying thing. Uh, you know, it's
sometimes hard.
>> It's like saying, can you be a good
parent if you don't love your kid?
>> I mean, you can't really, but that
doesn't mean every parent is infatuated
with their children every moment of
parenting,
>> right? My father-in-law, I don't know if
he's listening, but my father-in-law
likes to say,
>> he's listening. What are you thinking?
What do you think?
>> Staring at him. Hello. Could you let me
play my game?
>> Oh, is that your father-in-law? I don't
know. I was wondering who that nice man
was.
>> My father-in-law likes to say that.
>> He's a good guy. Yeah. What does he
like? My father likes to say that every
kid is his favorite. It just depends on
the day where different ones are
favorites. Whoever need whoever needs it
the most becomes the favorite.
>> But that right. So but one thing is that
you know not every rebby has to be the
the rebby that's a wow. You know there
are certain rebim that are more old
school and more you know not distant but
more authoritarian especially and that
works and that connects and that's
amazing.
>> Yeah. It doesn't mean they don't love
them. Love is this is the of of and the
kamayim is that it's not about what you
say it's not about what you do it's it's
an inner mitas that a child picks up on
>> right
>> and I think we know that I think I think
you know the people in your life who you
feel love you care about you and the
people who less so and you know it's not
so much only what they do it's how you
feel when you're around them
>> rabbi quick question for you this one's
this one I'll ask this came just came in
is it right to push or bribe my kid to
play with a friend or a neighbor who
doesn't have friends when she wouldn't
otherwise want to in order to teach good
midos. Wow, nice one.
>> This just was put on the chat. Is it
right to bribe my kid or to push my kid
to play with a friend or neighbor who
doesn't have friends and she doesn't who
in order to teach her good midas?
>> You know, it's funny because I grew up I
had that my father it should be wild.
>> You had no friends. You people were
>> I think Yeah. No, he was a
>> I would have been I would have been your
friend.
>> He was a big advocate of pushing me to
befriend some children who didn't have
other friends. He didn't bribe me,
although I don't mind collecting now if
that's an option. I didn't get bribed,
but I definitely got pushed. Yeah, I
think I think there's a place for that.
Encourage, I would use the word
encourage instead of bribe or push. I
would encourage it. I think it is good
midos. And I think at the end of the day
when they're together, the two of them,
and no one's watching, and you know,
it's not so bad usually, you know, the
kid is, but I did I did experience some
difficult times with these type of
friends. I mean, one of them had a Neok
situation in life and I remember I got
the new cliffhers racing car game for
Kaneka for my aunt. You know what that
is? Do you even know what that is?
>> No idea.
>> Okay. Cliffhangers was
>> if it wasn't basketball or baseball, I
don't know it as a kid.
>> It would go around and it went up the
wall. It was like electric cars where
you press these like things and it would
go up the wall. It was amazing. But if
you pressed it too hard, it would break
because it was like too much power. And
I said to this person, "Do not press it
hard." And he part of his social
challenge was that was not within his
scope. And he broke my cliffhers.
And that was a hard thing for me. So,
but that it's good. You taught me well
and it's okay. But
>> yeah. Go ahead. I think cliffhanger is
first of all like a muscle for certain
kids that could draw up the wall and
they they they climb up the wall.
>> I have to Google it.
>> I think the answer to this question is a
one-word answer. 100% yes. Your
daughter,
>> I don't like the word bribe, but I I I
think
>> bribing was a bit much.
>> I think it's very healthy to teach your
son or daughter the value of extending
her comfort zone to play with a friend.
Not every day, not every minute, but and
and explain to her emp it's what empathy
is. It's real awesome empathy. And it's
really um it's something that really
speaks to the fact that you're able to
be in someone else's shoes. Hey, you
have so many friends. She doesn't.
Invite her over with her friends. Maybe
go out with for a little bit after
school. Again, obviously it depends on
the age, but this is a tremendous
opportunity to teach your son or
daughter midas. And I actually would
prefer not to bribe again if it's she's
seven maybe if she's nine 10 11
>> seven it's like I think bribing is
>> right but
>> all right can I can I share a friend of
mine sent me a voice note just now with
a question so I think that would be fun.
Let me play you his his voice note.
>> Okay.
>> Let's see what it is. I'll play it for
you. Here we go.
>> TLC. This is my question. How much
should we be educating our kids about
the Holocaust, similar episodes of
Jewish oppression and anti-semitism
generally? The Holocaust was a constant
in my childhood. I grew up around
survivors and made survivors visit our
school regularly. Kids these days have
not had the same exposure to the
Holocaust. And I believe that October
7th and the surge in anti-semitism that
has resulted since has been a rude
awakening for some of today's kids. How
should we be educating our kids both in
and out of school on these topics and
preparing them to confront this aspect
of our history and place in the world?
Thank you. I thought that was
interesting because it's so timely I
guess you know and we haven't really
thought about we never talked about
Holocaust education.
>> We have not talked about Holocaust
education. I struggle because I think
obviously you know Holocaust education
in my family. Every family has their own
relationship with the Holocaust and
usually there's stories in every family.
We still live with the Holocaust very
very strongly in my family. But as
always I think age matters. I think it's
the challenge is you don't want to scare
children and it's very easy to scare
children. So what happens? So what
happens is that to misor puts out videos
for about the holocaust and what it's
really is it's heroes of the holocaust.
Right. Right. And
>> amuna
>> amuna and it's great stories of the suka
and the matzah and the oil and it's not
>> the terrors ra of the holocaust you know
>> do I think I think high school and you
know and I don't think we do a great
job. I don't because it's not part of
the core curriculum but but I think in
elementary school
>> mildly it's not part of the core
curriculum. It sounds like it's even on
the radar. It's not.
>> It's not on the radar. It's not. It's
not. Um, but I could just say in my
lane, I'm an elementary school. I think
we do u we bring in survivors. We names
not numbers is something we did in our
school. Um, a rebby of ours father was
just nifer used to come in and speak to
the boys and we've had people speak to
the boys about the Holocaust and about
anti-semitism. But you have to realize I
live my my we live in Manhattan. It's a
challenge. certain boys and I'm I walk
in the street with my yamaka and my
titas out and you know I'm I I don't
have that but some people walk in the
street with a baseball cap. So it's
almost like they don't feel the need as
parents don't teach my kid about the
fears of anti-semitism. I'm afraid to go
on the bus in the morning
>> sometimes. So we have to really balance
this delicate if we want to give this
big huge broad stroke of anti-semitism
in in Claus's history when we also want
to create keep our kids not scared to
come to yes in the morning.
>> I hear you. I hear you. I mean I
definitely remember growing up you know
the survivors were much more part of
>> they were there
>> our yeah our librarian is bodheimer and
others all shalom but it is it is a
sensitive especially in the world we
live in today post September 7th where
anti-semitism has really become you know
part of what we talk about part of
what's going on right we just had this
horrible article in the New York Times
it's like a standard kind of challenge
for us
>> but you talk about that in seventh grade
>> no first of all seventh I mean yeah
subtly meaning I wouldn't say the world
is you know but the idea that as of sun
and that even in the gullis it's a
regular theme of discomfort and uh you
know political I I happen to teach
Jewish history to eighth grade girls and
it does come up the idea of of using the
courts to be you know to anti-semitism
in court and uh you know issues like
that
>> I would much rather stress and revel
spoke about this at the conference the
ben
right to to show to use anti-semitism to
show how different we are than the that
we are the
and speak about our uniqueness and maybe
that's why they hate us but to focus you
know really on the the fear the scary
parts of anti-semitism in an elementary
school setting and through 8th grade
right
>> I get nervous stressing about it too
much in today's society maybe I'm maybe
that makes me I don't know weak a little
>> interesting question I mean you know
what What is the message? What message
do we want the holocaust to teach? You
know, I think that the Israel have have
discussed it a little, but
>> the answer is that it's very it's an
impossible to learn re I mean hashkafik
from the holocaust is hard. We we
struggle with it till today to explain
the Holocaust. So, you know, and here's
here's here in lies the rub. Ready? When
we're teaching Holocaust studies, we're
not doing it in Gumar with a Rebi. We're
doing it in the afternoon, right,
>> with an English teacher. We want that
English teacher who isn't the Charles
Rebi to be the one to define the
hashkuffic response of the Holocaust.
What are you crazy?
>> So that's why it's we don't I I I'll put
this way. I think in I don't think
there's a great
response, right? Or a great uh what's it
called? Way to
>> So maybe it's a fair question. And the
person essentially is saying like
especially in the wake of October 7th
and the anti-semitism we're
experiencing, we might want to rethink
uh how we teach that major aspect of
anti-semitism.
>> I'm going to ask you one more question.
>> I can't believe it's 8 o'clock already.
What is going on here?
>> 9 o you're you're used to
>> nine o'clock. Yeah.
>> I'm gonna ask you one more question.
It's a fascinating question about
teaching Tanakh. You ready?
>> Okay. Okay. An area I'm so proficient
in. Go ahead. It has to the the the
background of the question is the child
doesn't have clinical anxiety but the
child is a little anxious based and we
you know therefore
>> okay
>> there are Jewish books about even parts
of Tanakh that can get bloody violent
and sometimes gory especially for our
for our enemies this riles up certain
kids or could even make them nervous I
certainly don't want to sense or Tanakh
but what are the guidelines if any when
reading in the home and especially in
school for avoiding the bloodier aspects
of Jewish history and mccy especially
with younger children. Wow, great
question.
>> Yeah, I never heard that one before.
What has come to mind is a conversation
that I had with the Shiva in Baltimore
of Felmanita, but it was about a
different topic, but I think it's the
same kind of answer. He was talking
about the more like Natsneas components
that come up in saying Natsne is the
wrong expression. Sexual challenges and
things that come up in the sukim that a
kid might not be aware of, you know, and
>> shirim obvious.
>> Yeah. even insukim even even to kumish
you know can happen that a kid is like
doesn't know about you know and so he
was very emphatic very very strong that
the rabbi should just teach it it's part
of the Torah
>> and you know just teach it as a fact and
you'll be surprised how easy kids are
all freaking out but kids they just like
they roll with it most of them don't
really fully understand it but whatever
either way you know it's that's what he
said he felt very strongly that the
message we're giving is that the Torah
is is is there to learn and everything
is part of the world and it's a very
healthy message in a way that it's not
like these inyanim are like somehow from
the Torah you know so I I don't know
that's what's coming to my mind is that
if you're teaching Tanakh and you're and
you don't skip to those gory parts but
for whatever reason it comes up let's
say the brothers uh when they went to
kill and the way you know whatever is in
the sukim I think you teach it I don't I
don't think that's a you don't uh
sugarcoat it it's part of the Torah what
happened to the Egyptians or whatever,
>> right?
>> I think that's the D. I don't know. I
mean, I'd be curious what you have to
say.
>> So, I struggle I struggle with this as a
Rebi. Really struggle went through this
because I think when you're teaching
fourth grade and the Egyptians and the
Mitsur and they sink and some like lead
and some like straw, you make it into a
stick. I think kids bounce off their
back. I was a eighth grade rabbi and I
taught Malak Bay and let me tell you,
Malak Bay has some gory real gory like
shishaba.
No was not mal but but but a lot of gore
and I struggled to teach the takeaway
from it because the kids were struggling
with it. My eighth graders were starting
rebi these are our sadikim these are the
nim and I actually went to about this I
went to a few I went to kitats about
this I went to I went to
>> great wow what a question let's hear
what did they say
>> soak almost slapped me across the face
>> what's the matter with you he was
screaming was galdi my my rub's father
he thought I was nuts he's understand it
was the rats on hashem that this is what
should be done to them I said I know but
like to to a kid today it Sounds
barbaric. Barbaric.
It's a m He thought I was mamishifer. He
thought I was mamish off my rocker.
>> Wow.
>> And what a tatska tats told me that he
struggles. He classicat I consider one
of my such a good a holy Jew. He said I
struggle with some of these questions
but it bothers me that I struggle with
them.
>> Interesting.
>> That's what he said to me. So I tried to
like talk about first you know the fact
that when when it is theem even if we
don't appreciate how this seems pretty
gory that's where comes obviously this
is and the gory parts yeah so in terms
of the anxiety I guess to the actual
question I don't know that's up to the
rabbi to teach it in a way that isn't so
terrifying yeah don't turn off the
lights when you're discussing you know
that part of of Na'vi I mean B should
not be that maybe not taught to fifth
grade, but I don't think most eth grade.
>> Yeah, eighth grade.
>> Yeah. I don't know. I mean, I I think it
from a moral just to like if I was
teaching eth grade, what I would say is
that the standards of war, right, it's
like a it's a culture of the of the
society of that time. They're standards.
And today we have our own standards of
war that are different than they were.
>> But it gets very tricky. It gets very
tricky. So, Reb, you're saying that the
times of the those were immoral and
incorrect. These are very hard.
appropriate to behave within the context
of your society. So they used to spit in
shu. They used to like have these
spatoon where you'd come at the shul and
I don't know what exactly we could have
your father-in-law do it for us cuz he's
here. He could fully, you know,
regurgitate. But if you did that in and
spit on the floor if you did that today,
it wouldn't be appropriate either.
Abunam did it in 1812 in uh Texas or
wherever they were. The answer is that
that was appropriate then. It's not. So,
I think that when it comes to war and
the standards of war, it was a different
time and they fought differently. They
use swords, we use guns, you know, it's
just different and um it takes out that
moral. You're right. Today, if someone
went and shish kebab someone, that might
be a little aggressive, you know, could
be. Could be.
>> Yeah.
>> Anyway,
>> probably here's the sad part. The sad
part is that there is no real phone
number. I mean, you could you right I
don't know why we're we could ask for no
phone number.
>> Yeah, we could say listen for next
season we're
>> No. Or could they they could just say
thank you. they could leave wonderful
messages about cross.
>> We're always looking for feedback and
anyway this is a very valued role that I
have and I I have to do it or else you
know it wouldn't feel like an episode.
So I I I want to just I guess end by and
let you have the final say as you always
do that you know we consider it aus to
to do what we do daily and this allows
us to have a forum to be able to speak
to people to hear from people and as we
move forward to season 4 you know if
those want to post in the chat and we
can you know say it afterwards or talk
about it privately what they want to see
in season 4 as we continue but really um
It's been three wonderful seasons.
Hopefully the Kazak means something. We
look forward to continuing this in the
future. I I enjoy our back and forth
together with you and our readers in
Mishb Magazine and our listeners on the
podcast. And you know, I enjoy what I
do. I hope it's I think it is it's been
an absolute pleasure.
>> Yeah. And of course, a special shout out
to the thousands of people who have come
over to me and say, I like listening to
you, but you always get Shfeld right and
you always set him straight. So, thank
you to those thousands of fans who get
who listen with a smart ear. Okay, since
I got the last word and I just wanted to
mention that. Okay, so we will uh end
with mentioning our email and phone
numbers. The email is the learning
[email protected].
One word, the learning
[email protected]
and you could call in and leave a voice
note at 4436869339.
That's 443-6869339.
Rabari, have a wonderful Zimmer.
>> Maybe I'll see you again in the summer.
Take care. Have a wonderful summer.